![]() |
|||||
birding...NEWS |
|
||||
|
|||||
|
Ray of hope for vultures facing extinctionToday saw a glimmer of hope for the three species of Asian vulture threatened with extinction. Slender-billed Gyps tenuirostris, Indian G. indicus and White-rumped Vultures G. bengalensis in South Asia have suffered one of the most rapid and widespread population declines of any bird species, declining by more than 97 per cent over the last 10-15 years. These declines were caused by the widespread veterinary use of the drug diclofenac for the treatment of sick domestic livestock throughout the Indian subcontinent. Diclofenac kills vultures that feed on the bodies of livestock that have been given the drug shortly before death. To combat diclofenac’s devastating effects on vulture populations, the Indian government announced, in March 2005, its intention to phase out the use of the drug. However, progress has been hampered by the lack of an alternative drug that is known to be safe for vultures yet effective for treating livestock. In a new report published in the open access journal PLoS Biology, a team of scientists from South Africa, Namibia, India and the UK concluded that such an alternative has now been found. The team, led by Gerry Swan of the University of Pretoria, found that the drug meloxicam was safe to vultures at the likely range of levels they would be exposed to in the wild. Meloxicam, which is similar to diclofenac in its effectiveness for treating livestock, has recently become available for veterinary use in India and could easily be used in place of diclofenac. Publication of these results is very timely because the government of India today convened a two-day international meeting to decide how to save the endangered vultures. Removal of diclofenac from their food supply is a vital step, so the identification of an alternative drug may have come just in time. Created: 02nd Feb 2006
|
|||||
![]() |
back to the top of this page |
Site developed by PlanetWorks and Firecast |
|||
| This site was last updated on Wednesday, 30th March 2005. | |||||
| Fatbirder is best viewed with a screen resolution of 800x600 or greater using Netscape v4+ or Internet Explorer v4+
Feedback/Contact/Advertising Info :: |
|||||